43 



THE 05L0GIST. 



The Oologist. 



A Monthly Magazine Devoted to 

 OOLOGY AND ORNITHOLOGY. 



JRANK H. LATTIN, Editor and Publislier, 



ALBION, N. Y. 



Correspondence and items of Interest to the 

 student of Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited 

 from all. 



TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: 



Single subscription soc per annum 



Sample copies 5c each 



The above rates Include payment of postage. 



Each subscriber is given a card good for a 

 Want, Exchange or For Sale Notice. (This card 

 is redeemable at any time within one year from 

 date thereon.) 



Subscriptions can begin with any number. 

 Bacli numbers of the Oologist can be furnished 

 at reasonable rates. Send stamp for descrip- 

 tions and prices. 



ll»~Remember that the publisher must be noti- 

 fied by letter when a subscriber wishes his paper 

 stopped, and all arrearages must be paid. 



ADVERTISING RATES : 



5 cents per nonpareil line each insertion. 



12 lines In every inch. Seven Inches in a col- 

 umn, and two columns to the page. 



Nothing inserted for less than 2 5 cents. No 

 "special rates," 5 cents per line is "net," "rocli 

 bottom," "Inside," "spot cash" rate from which 

 there Is no deviation and no commission to 

 agents. If you wish to use 5 lines or less space 

 it win cost you 25 cents; lOO lines, $5.00; lOOO lines, 

 $50.00. "Trade" (other than cash) advertise- 

 ments will be accepted by special arrangement 

 only and at rates from double to Ave times casli 

 rates. Due Bills and Cards payable in advertis- 

 ing will be honored only at regular rates In force 

 at the date of Issuance of said bill or card. 



Remittances should be made by Draft, Express 

 or Postofflce Money Order, Registered Letter or 

 Postal Note. Unused U. S. Postage Stamps of 

 any denomination will be accepted for sums un- 

 der one dallar. Make Money Orders and Drafts 

 payable and address all subscriptions and com- 

 munications to FRANK H. LATTIN, 



Albion, Orleans Co., N. Y. 



ffWTERED AT THE POST Of^FlCE AT ALBION, N. Y., 



J SECOND-CLASS MATTER. 



A Day "With the Haptores. 



An early hour on the morning of May 

 11, 1895 found my friend Mr. M. B. 

 ^Grifflng and myself ready to start for a 

 day's collecting after the Raptores. 



The day was perfect. Not a cloud in 

 the sky and it promised to be pretty 

 warm before sunset. 



We started for Sachem's Neck and ar- 

 rived there about 8:00 a. m. My first 

 nest was one of the American Osprey 

 {Pandion halmlus carolinensis), situated 

 in a pine tree and about thirty-five feet 



up. It was composed of sticks, pieces 

 of sod, corn-stalks and sea-weed, in fact 

 almost any kind of rubbish. 



The climb was easy and I was soon 

 looking on the two large eggs which 

 the nest contained. They were a deep 

 cream color, spotted and splashed with 

 several shades of brown; the larger end 

 being entirely obscured by the mark- 

 ings. Packing these I descended the 

 tree and was soon joined by Mr. Griff- 

 ing who had secured a fine set of three 

 Osprey's from a large cherry tree whinh 

 stood near a deserted barn. 



Traveling east from here we reached 

 a strip of woods and a few minutes later 

 my friend called out that he had found 

 a nest of Cooper's Hawk {Accipiter 

 cooperi). Going over to him I climbed 

 the tree and saw four white eggs in the 

 nest. These we left for a while to 

 make certain of the identity and hid in 

 some thick undergrowth. The old 

 bird came back presently and we were_ 

 then sure of our hnd. The nest was 

 composed entirely of small twigs and 

 was situated in a beech tree about 

 thirty-five feet up. The eggs are white 

 slightly marked with faint spots of 

 light brown and lavender. Packing 

 up we started on our course which now 

 lay along Gardiner's Bay. 



After proceeding a short way we 

 came to our next nest which was one 

 of the Osprey. It was situateci in a 

 black gum tree forty-five feet from the 

 ground and on the end of a limb ten 

 feet from the trunk of the tree. 'Ad- 

 justing my climbers I was soon stand- 

 ing ^?^ the nesl which was an immense 

 afl'air probably the accumulation of 

 years of nest building. It contained a 

 set of/o?ir eggs, ground color, a pecul- 

 iar shade of brown spotted with choc- 

 olate-brown. In 1894 I took a set of 

 two eggs from this same nest which, 

 were similar in color and markings. 

 After carefully measuring the nest I 

 climbed down and we continued on our 

 way. 



